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Restoring My Grandfather's Splitting Maul
This was a splitting maul that belonged to my Grandfather. It had been laying around collecting rust for decades. I decided to restore the maul and craft a maple hand for it. I hope you enjoy watching the process as much as I enjoyed working with it.

Silver Knights Billiard Cue with Gold,Silver,Sapphire inlays - Frigyes Art
SILVER KNIGHTS
The cue, which revives the spirit of the age of knights, has been made with the inlay of gold, silver and some sapphire patterns, and with the use of pieces of antlers and leather.
This unique billiards cue was made after 1560 workhours. Careful preparation preceded the making procedure, meaning precise designing and accurate choice of the right materials.
Its ornament is made of fine gold and silver plates, the thoroughly elaborated and hand-carved 1128 inlays and the 20 sapphire marquetries give the cue a remarkable sight.
It has a hand-made wooden box covered inside with leather-work and it is also decorated with inlays. Its silver hinge has a sapphire chasing with a flowery pattern. The chasing is painted with high gloss lacquer coat and it is nicely polished. All these features make this cue unique and highly elegant.
Materials used for the work: 9ct yellow gold, 925 silver, sapphire, hungarian akac macassary ebony, ebony, american walnut

Silver Knights Billiard Cue with Gold,Silver,Sapphire inlays - Frigyes Art
SILVER KNIGHTS
The cue, which revives the spirit of the age of knights, has been made with the inlay of gold, silver and some sapphire patterns, and with the use of pieces of antlers and leather.
This unique billiards cue was made after 1560 workhours. Careful preparation preceded the making procedure, meaning precise designing and accurate choice of the right materials.
Its ornament is made of fine gold and silver plates, the thoroughly elaborated and hand-carved 1128 inlays and the 20 sapphire marquetries give the cue a remarkable sight.
It has a hand-made wooden box covered inside with leather-work and it is also decorated with inlays. Its silver hinge has a sapphire chasing with a flowery pattern. The chasing is painted with high gloss lacquer coat and it is nicely polished. All these features make this cue unique and highly elegant.
Materials used for the work: 9ct yellow gold, 925 silver, sapphire, hungarian akac macassary ebony, ebony, american walnut

I've Seen Every Wood (species) - ukulele
A tune for all you carpenters and woodworkers out there! A parody of the old Hank Snow classic that I threw together, featuring a variety of wood species. Here's my ukulelified version!

Array
In this video I missed drilling 4 holes I returned the wood to the jig and drilled the 4 missing holes so you can take a piece out and put back loosing you'r settings Drilling boards for edge line up I was using 3/8 pegs they measure 1/2 in corner to corner but they come apart much easier, if gluing you would want to use a solid wooden dowel

Step Stool
See a need, fill a need... Building a mostly walnut step stool.I was tired of the ugly plastic stool in the kids bathroom so I did something about it. Its walnut and mystery wood. Could be cherry, if you know, please share down below. The video of me cutting out the stub mortise for the support bar was corrupt... but to sum it up, I drilled a hole with a forstner bit and squared it up with a Japanese dovetail chisel. I'm really into contrasting woods lately, I don't think thats going to change anytime soon.Contact- Email - dhpmakestuff@gmail.com- Google+ - https://plus.google.com/u/0/11 3298751...- Twitter - https://twitter.com/dustinpenn er?lang=enThanks for watching! If you enjoy my videos, please like and subscribe. Any funds generated from this channel are invested back into it.

I've Seen Every Wood (species) - ukuleleGreat adaption of a classic. For the record, the original was written by Australian songwriter Geoff Mack in 1962. The original version was with Australian place names. Mack rewrote the song with American places for Hank Snow (using an atlas), but only after the song was a big hit in Australia for a country singer named Lucky Starr. The song has been adapted to many countries since, and many people have recorded covers. My favourite was by a comedy group here in Australia, who did most of the song with one place name - 'Wollongong', with the occasional 'Dapto' thrown in (Dapto is a suburb of Wollongong).12:28 PM, 20th May 2018bruceward51

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